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Dairy Department, The Univesity of Tennessee, Knoxville 37901
ABSTRACT
Employing a calcium-sensitive electrode to estimate the calcium activity, additions of up to 2.5 mmoles of CaCl2/liter of milk resulted in a linear response curve with about one-third of the added calcium remaining in the ionic state. The addition of rennet to milk resulted in a decrease in calcium ion concentration until coagulation occurred, at which time the calcium ion concentration in the curd-whey mixture gradually rose. ß-Lactoglobulin heated at 65 or 75 C for 30 min did not bind more calcium than an unheated specimen. The 75 C treatment caused an increase in optical density which was greater at higher levels of added calcium. Samples heated at 65 C showed no such increase in optical densitv.
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